Architecture BuildingArchitecture Building

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Architecture and Interior Design News directly to your inbox

    What's Hot

    AN Interior in conversation with Yabu Pushelberg

    March 25, 2023

    Oren Safdie’s latest play debuts this April at Urban Stages

    March 25, 2023

    AN Interior in conversation with Refractory

    March 24, 2023
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Trending
    • AN Interior in conversation with Yabu Pushelberg
    • Oren Safdie’s latest play debuts this April at Urban Stages
    • AN Interior in conversation with Refractory
    • Finalists announced for a housing ideas competition in Chicago
    • New York’s historic Flatiron Building sells at auction for $190 million
    • Shigeru Ban creates paper partition shelters for Turkey-Syria earthquake victims
    • BIG designs ‘meandering’ whiskey distillery and new HQ for Blue Run Spirits in Georgetown, Kentucky
    • The Pavilion of the Republic of Kosovo will present rks2 | transcendent locality in Venice Biennale
    Facebook Twitter Instagram
    Architecture BuildingArchitecture Building
    Demo
    • Home
    • Latest News
    • Architecture
    • Interior Design
    • Art
    • Design
    • Urbanism
    Architecture BuildingArchitecture Building
    Home » Charlap Hyman & Herrero curates an art show
    Design

    Charlap Hyman & Herrero curates an art show

    January 12, 2023Updated:January 12, 20235 Mins Read
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    House for the Inhabitant Who Refused to Participate
    Curated by Charlap Hyman & Herrero
    525 West 21st Street
    New York, New York 10011
    Open through January 21

    Between 1974 and 1979, the architect and theorist John Hejduk—one of the famed New York Five who made modernism postmodern—made presentation drawings for what he called The House for the Inhabitant Who Refused to Participate. The residence was to be a tower of a dozen suspended units from a wall. Each would contain a device for living: Unit 1 held a kitchen sink, unit 2 a kitchen stove, unit 5 a bed, and unit 12 a toilet. (Unit 7 was empty or, perhaps given the number’s theological resonance, full of grace.) The inhabitant would have a one-way mirror in which to view themselves; a ladder would allow a visitor to view them through the mirror, too; and an overhead door allows a third participant to seal them both in the tower forever.

    At some point, the story goes, a contessa built a version of this tower on an island near Venice without Hejduk’s participation. In the summer of 2020, a dozen architects occupied the home, which was falling apart and, given its location, slated to be razed and transformed into a glamping hideaway. This in turn became Rituals of Solitude, an exhibition at the Venice Architecture Biennale that same year. Hejduk had previously commented that his architecture had moved from an “Architecture of Optimism” to an “Architecture of Pessimism.” Perhaps he meant that modernism’s jet-set futurity had flattened into sad spectacle, which certainly seems to be the case these days.

    It’s a thrill, then, to see this lineage of ideas embraced positively, without cynicism. This is the case at a current exhibition at Chelsea’s Tina Kim Gallery curated by Charlap Hyman Herrero (CHH). Adam Charlap Hyman and Andre Herrero are skilled rethinkers of postmodernism’s legacy, as their fascination with décor is anchored by historical research and intellectual rigor. Following their 2021 design of a maze of arched spaces for paintings by Davide Balliano, their latest curatorial venture takes its name from Hejduk’s project. In essence, it stages a set of like-minded pieces around one of his domestic provocations. The show is about the frozen time of a single instance—an isolation comprised of watching each other watch ourselves. If curation is sometimes a matter of time travel, here CHH works to cease time entirely.

    And they literally do. Sophie Stone’s silk-and-wood-bead Ribbon Mat (with red curls) (2022) hangs in the upper right corner of the gallery, just below the ceiling. “We imagined it was the sun,” Charlap Hyman told AN. During installation, CHH’s Associate Interior Design Director Chelsey Mitchell climbed a ladder and held a spotlight in its place; Charlap Hyman then traced by hand the shadows cast by the various furniture, sculptures, paintings, and other artworks into gray felt covering the gallery floor. He sliced out the shadows in black felt and set them into the gray. The objects now cast this particular shade forever, as if enjoying an eternal golden hour—or, for the pessimists, a sunset without end.

    CHH included work that can withstand a little high-concept heavy-handedness. In a far corner, the glass base of James Hong’s Tropic of Cancer dining table (1981) spans between a lacquered wood shell and an undulating set of concrete steps; black felt pools from each of them, and not from the hovering glass top. (It perhaps harkens back to Hejduk’s one-way mirror.) Charlap Hyman said they hoped the shadows’ “stillness would become radiant.” This happens in the Mathieu Matégot’s Le soleil de Tijuana (c. 1960), a drug rug that threads hallucinatory levels of color and form into an Aubusson tapestry. It presses against the white gallery wall like a thumb against the back of an eyelid.

    colorful tapestry hangs on wall in gallery
    red textile hanging from ceiling

    Another pair of works seem to capture moments of spatial shift; installed on opposite walls, they also embody a mind/body split. Anne Libby’s Split Tint (2022) is a grid of satin and batting that imagines a curtain wall out of the materials that might make a curtain itself. It’s a brain tickler of bravura, a defamiliarization of the reflections of a generic glass facade, as if the Seagram Building, flapping in the wind, began to crinkle. Across the room, Heidi Bucher’s astonishing latex-and-mother-of-pearl BORG (Wandstück)/BORG (Wallpiece) (1975–7) is an artifact from the artist’s practice of casting rooms in rubber, decades before Rachel Whiteread or Do Ho Suh. “She skins buildings,” Charlap Hyman observed.

    Two artists toy with escape. Across Ficus Interfaith’s Rockaway Door (2018), mosaics of metal and popcorn form an impressionist surround. “It’s a portal that is a river,” Charlap Hyman ventured. It’s also a warning: CHH here—and only here—allowed the felt to rise onto the wall, so a glance through the “door” catches the floor extending in perspective. Plopped in the entry vestibule, Sam Chermayeff’s Juicer Set (2022) is a household blender set in a metal tube and unfinished log that’s both a cutting board and an umbrella stand. (The set-up was used to make margaritas during the show’s opening.) Chermayeff has “broken free of the tyranny of kitchen appliances,” Charlap Hyman explained, and now uses “the whole kitchen as a medium of expression.”

    brown textile hangs on wall
    large jewelry piece lays on bed

    The most striking piece sits in the center of this arrangement, and here is where the show hits home. CHH displays Hejduk’s own “Cilia” double bed (1987), plucked from First Dibs. With its metal-and-wood frame sprouting a quartet of star-topped towers, it’s a mix of medieval pageantry and Rossi-like playfulness. Across its sheets, CHH draped Stephanie Shiu’s Pax Dei (Coverlet) (2022); the net of precious stones is designed to heal the seven chakras, anticipating a salutary effect on the body. Hejduk’s bed, as an architectural allegory, captures sex and dreaming and rest within its four-cornered fort. Only CHH’s shadows escape, and not a moment too soon.

    Jesse Dorris is a writer in New York City and hosts Polyglot, a radio show on WFMU.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Telegram Email

    Related Articles

    Maarten Baas lights up a library in The Netherlands with literary phrases

    March 23, 2023

    Exhibit Columbus’ Winter Presentations offered chance for public comment

    March 10, 2023

    At Yale, an exhibition surveys the wild world of François Dallegret

    March 8, 2023

    Pierre Yovanovitch designs movable backdrops for an Italian opera

    March 2, 2023

    Cooper Hewitt names 2024 Smithsonian Design Triennial curators

    February 8, 2023

    Didier Fiúza Faustino mounts show of futuristic imaginaries at the MAAT

    January 25, 2023
    Top Posts

    Design team selected to reimagine St. Lawrence Centre for the Arts

    March 16, 202310

    UT Austin symposium examines future of architecture and AI

    March 10, 20234

    UAE Welcomes ART From Around the Globe

    December 23, 20223

    Desert X presents 12 installations exploring social and environmental issues in the Coachella Valley

    March 17, 20232
    Stay In Touch
    • Facebook
    • Twitter
    • Pinterest
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • Vimeo

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest Architecture and Interior Design News directly to your inbox

    Don't Miss
    News

    Shigeru Ban creates paper partition shelters for Turkey-Syria earthquake victims

    By adminMarch 24, 20230

    Pritzker Prize-winning architect Shigeru Ban has installed his Paper Partition Shelters (PPS) for the victims…

    BIG designs ‘meandering’ whiskey distillery and new HQ for Blue Run Spirits in Georgetown, Kentucky

    March 24, 2023

    The Pavilion of the Republic of Kosovo will present rks2 | transcendent locality in Venice Biennale

    March 24, 2023

    Progress is underway on memorial for Triangle Shirtwaist Factory fire

    March 23, 2023
    © 2023 Architecture Building. All rights reserved.
    • About
    • Contact
    • Terms
    • Privacy Policy

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.